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A host virtual machine is the server component of a virtual machine the underlying hardware that provides computing resources to support a particular guest VM. Together, the host virtual machine and guest virtual machine make up a virtual machine server.

Virtualization technologies such as XenServer by Citrix Systems, Microsoft Hyper-V and VMware vSphere install a layer of abstraction between the host and guest virtual machines.

The host virtual machine explained

A host VM is an important virtualization technique. It lets users create a guest VM with a user operating system (OS), applications and compute resources. Simply put, the host machine is the machine creating the guest VM.

The host VM requests its compute power from the host server. Its data is stored in a virtualization environment that is integrated with the virtualization manager application.

Every host machine is assigned infrastructure resources that are statically or dynamically scalable. It is also assigned security and statistical information about their performance and throughput. The virtualization server does these assignments to manage the operation of all host machines.

Multiple host VMs can be hosted on a single physical server. Moreover, each host VM on this single server can execute and operate without affecting the operations of the other host VMs on that server. Furthermore, because the environment is isolated from the rest of the system, anything running inside the VM doesn't interfere with anything else running on the host hardware.

A comparison between traditional and virtual architecture.

The host VM server component -- a physical machine -- of the virtual machine in a virtual architecture.

Benefits of a host virtual machine

Using virtual servers on a host VM instead of physical hardware provides many benefits including the following:

The main benefits of server virtualization.

Host virtual machine vs. guest virtual machine

The host VM and guest VM are the two components of a VM. Here are the main differences between the two:

Architecture of the host VM

The architecture of a host VM includes the following components:

Setting up a virtual machine server or the host VM

Similar to physical machines, each VM will need RAM and CPU. In addition, the host server also requires sufficient storage. Setting up a virtual machine server requires the following steps:

  1. Ensure sufficient RAM -- as much fast RAM as one can get -- and CPUs with as many cores as possible. Sufficient disk space of at least 8 GB to 20 GB should also be available as VMs require a great amount of computer resources.
  2. Consider Serial Advanced Technology Attachment or Serial Attached Small Computer System Interface drives to store virtual server images.
  3. Use virtualization software, or hypervisors, such as Hyper-V, VMware or Citrix XenServer to set up the VM server.
  4. Choose the right network connection that needs to be set up for the VM, the guest OS to run and the location where the VM's files will be stored.

Virtualization functions by separating physical hardware and devices from the applications operating on that hardware. Learn the difference between Type 1 vs. Type 2 hypervisor and their specific use cases. Explore the key differences between containers vs. VMs and see what to know for your virtualized storage selection process. Become familiar with storage virtualization software options and check out virtual server management best practices.

This was last updated in April 2024

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